US bank woes? Silicon Valley Bank stocks plunge 1 day after Silvergate downfall

Fears have been heightened over the future of another United States bank this week after Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) announced a significant sale of assets and stocks aimed at raising additional capital.

However, some investors may be concerned that not all is well at the tech startup and VC-focused bank, particularly given the closure of crypto bank Silvergate just a day earlier. Shares in Silicon Valley Bank collapsed over 60%, wiping some $80 billion in value from the bank’s shares.

SVB is one of the top 20 largest banks in the United States and provides banking services to the likes of crypto-friendly venture firms Sequoia and Andreessen Horowitz (a16z).

In a Mar. 8 financial update, it disclosed it sold $21 billion worth of its securities holdings for a $1.8 billion loss to shore up its balance sheet.

It also raised $500 million from venture firm General Atlantic and is seeking to raise another $1.75 billion in sales of its shares to a total of $2.25 billion.

It said the sale was made as it expects โ€œcontinued higher interest rates, pressured public and private markets, and elevated cash burn levels from our clients as they invest in their businesses.โ€

The release of the financials, however, plunged SVBโ€™s stock price by 60% on Mar. 9 according to Google Finance, with investors concerned about the bank’s financial positon. Itโ€™s also seen a further 23% decline in after-hours trading.

SVBโ€™s five-day chart shows the sharp one-day price decline from around $265 to trading at nearly $80 after hours on Mar. 9. Source: Google Finance

According to a Mar. 9 report from The Information, SVB chief, Greg Becker, told investors to โ€œstay calmโ€ and said the bank has โ€œample liquidity to support our clients with one exception: If everyone is telling each other SVB is in trouble, that would be a challenge.โ€

In a stakeholder letter Becker reaffirmed the bank was โ€œwell-capitalizedโ€ and had โ€œone of the lowest loan-to-deposit ratios of any bank of our sizeโ€ and expected to reinvest the capital from the sale into โ€œmore asset-sensitive, short-termโ€ securities.

Many have shared concerns regarding the potential knock-on effect if SVBโ€™s clients were to instigate a bank run.

On Twitter, founders and tech executives however aired their support for the bank and urged others not to panic.ย 

Mark Suster of Upfront Ventures tweeted on Mar. 9 that โ€œmore in the VC community need to speak out publicly to quell the panic about [SVB].โ€

โ€œI believe they could only fail if everybody panics so I would urge calm decisions based on facts,โ€ he added.

Reacting to the news, Zak Kukoff, principal at VC firm General Catalyst said the bank had โ€œconsistently gone out of their wayโ€ for startups and said, โ€œnow is the right time to support them.โ€

Related: Silvergate downfall sparks debate over whose fault it actually was

The uncertainty over SVB follows only a day after Silvergate said it willย โ€œwind down operationsโ€ and liquidate its crypto-friendly bank.

In a March 8 announcement, Silvergate Capital Corporation said the decision to shutter operations was โ€œin light of recent industry and regulatory developments.โ€

Silvergate was one of the major banking partners for many crypto firms, but drew concerns about its solvency following an announcement it would delay the filing of its annual 10-K report by two weeks. The document typically provides an overview of a companyโ€™s financial situation.ย